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a deep summary for Introduction to Global Law II for finals and finals part for resit, it also has some example questions and cases are explained

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Introduction to Global Law II – Final Exam Deep Dive (Modules 7-12)




Module 7: Introduction to the EU
1. What is the EU?

●​ A unique political and economic union of 27 European states.
●​ Not a state, not a federation, but a supranational organization.
●​ Main purpose: Promote peace, stability, economic cooperation, and integration.

2. Historical Foundations

●​ Rooted in post-WWII reconstruction.
●​ First institutional step: ECSC (1951), then EEC via Treaty of Rome (1957).
●​ Lisbon Treaty (2009): Currently governing treaty framework (TEU & TFEU).

3. Foundational Treaties & Principles

●​ TEU: Outlines institutional structure, democratic principles, citizenship.
●​ TFEU: Details specific policy domains and EU competencies.
●​ Core Principles:
○​ Conferral (EU acts only where treaties allow it).
○​ Subsidiarity (EU acts only when action is more effective at Union level).
○​ Proportionality (EU actions must not exceed what is necessary).

4. Institutional Structure

●​ European Commission: Executive; proposes legislation.holds the right of legislative
initiative
●​ European Parliament: Directly elected; shares legislative power.
●​ Council of the EU (Ministers): Represents national governments.
●​ European Council: Heads of state; strategic direction.
●​ Court of Justice (CJEU): Ensures uniform interpretation and application of EU law.
●​ European Central Bank: Manages eurozone monetary policy.

5. Legitimacy and Bureaucracy

●​ EU criticized as over-bureaucratic ("iron cage" of rules).
●​ Yet, ensures uniformity, transparency, and impartiality.
●​ Legitimacy from treaties and institutional balance.

,Module 8: EU Policy and Law-Making
1. What is Policy?

●​ Non-binding frameworks/goals that guide law-making.
●​ Often shaped by social values, lobbying, political agendas.

2. What is Law?

●​ Binding rules with legal effect (Regulations, Directives, Decisions).

3. EU Law-Making Process

●​ Agenda Setting: Commission identifies issues.
●​ Consultations: Green Papers, White Papers, stakeholder input.
●​ Proposal: Commission submits draft legislation.
●​ Ordinary Legislative Procedure:
○​ Parliament + Council approve via majority.
○​ Article 289 TFEU governs this process.

4. Types of Legal Instruments (Article 288 TFEU)

●​ Regulations: Directly applicable in all Member States.
●​ Directives: Binding as to result; national choice on form/method.
●​ Decisions: Binding to whom addressed.
●​ Recommendations/Opinions: Non-binding.

5. Lobbying and Civil Participation

●​ Citizens (via ECI) and interest groups shape policy (Article 11.4 TEU).
●​ Example: Packaging regulation and industry lobbying.

6. Legitimacy and Effectiveness

●​ Institutional input (Commission, Parliament, Council).
●​ Output legitimacy through effectiveness.




Module 9: The International Level/Layer

,1. EU and International Law Relationship

●​ EU is autonomous but operates in global legal order.
●​ Kadi I & II cases: EU law prevails over conflicting international obligations (e.g., UN SC
resolutions).
●​ Article 216(2) TFEU: International agreements concluded by the EU are binding on
institutions and MS.

2. Multilevel Governance

●​ EU law as part of complex legal framework.
●​ National law, international law, and EU law interact.
●​ Tension between sovereignty and integration.

3. Opinion of AG Maduro

●​ Emphasizes supremacy and autonomy of EU law.

4. Legal Hierarchy

●​ EU law (especially primary law) takes precedence.
●​ International law subject to internal constitutional principles.




Module 10: The Courts in the EU
1. CJEU Structure

●​ Court of Justice: Handles references from national courts.
●​ General Court: Direct actions by individuals/companies.

2. Types of Actions

●​ Direct Actions:
○​ Article 263 TFEU: Annulment.
○​ Article 265 TFEU: Failure to act.
○​ Article 340 TFEU: Damages.
●​ Indirect Actions:
○​ Article 267 TFEU: Preliminary reference procedure.

3. Judicial Review Principles

●​ Ensures EU institutions act lawfully.

, ●​ Ensures consistent interpretation (via Article 267 TFEU).

4. Role of National Courts

●​ Must apply EU law.
●​ Refer questions of interpretation to CJEU (obligatory if no appealable court).




Module 11: EU and the Internal Market
1. Four Freedoms (Articles 26, 34-36, 45, 49, 56, 63 TFEU)

●​ Free movement of:
○​ Goods
○​ Services
○​ People (Workers)
○​ Capital

2. Key Doctrines

●​ Mutual Recognition: Products lawfully sold in one MS must be accepted in others.
●​ Cassis de Dijon: Market access cannot be restricted unless justified.
●​ Proportionality Test: Measures must be suitable, necessary, proportionate.

3. Discrimination vs. Market Access

●​ Originally focus on non-discrimination (treating foreign goods equally).
●​ Now includes "market access" test (hindrances even if neutral).

4. Case Law Emphasis

●​ Dassonville, Cassis, Keck, Gebhard, Bosman, etc.
●​ Understand factual context + principle.




Module 12: EU and Human Rights
1. Sources of Rights

●​ Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU
●​ European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR)
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